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A. compound sentence
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B. complex sentence
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C. none
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D. simple sentence
Explanation
A simple sentence contains a subject and a verb, and it may also have an object and modifiers.
However, it contains only one independent clause.
'he confessed his crime/guilt' which involves a single subject and predicate yet conveys complete sense is a simple sentence
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A. Future continuous tense
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B. Future perfect tense
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C. Past Perfect tense
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D. Future perfect continuous tense
Explanation
Future continuous tense: Subject + will be/shall be + first form of a verb + object.
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A. have arrived
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B. arrived
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C. had arrived
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D. arrive
Explanation
- Shazia had opened the door before we arrived
- شازیہ ہمارے پہنچنے سے پہلے دروازہ کھول چکی تھی۔
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- Arrived is best to keep the meaning of the original sentence.
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- past tense and past participle form is had, so we use the second form of the verb "arrived"
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- he/she/it arrives
- present participle arriving
- past tense arrived
- past participle arrived
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A. Whose
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B. Which
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C. Whom
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D. Who
Explanation
Use "whom" when it's the object of the verb or preposition.
In this sentence, the person is receiving the book (object of the verb give), so "whom" is correct
Verb: give
Subject: You
Object: whom
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A. Because
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B. Or
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C. And
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D. But
Explanation
"but" is used to contrast intention with inability.
I would go, but I don’t have time.
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A. None of these
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B. Has worked
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C. Will work
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D. Worked
Explanation
This is a second conditional sentence (If + past simple, would + base verb).
So the correct form is: If he worked harder, he would pass.
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A. Adverb Phrase
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B. Noun Phrase
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C. Adjective Phrase
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D. None of these
Explanation
- "To buy a computer" explains the purpose of her action (has gone), modifying the verb.
- A phrase that modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb is an adverb phrase.
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A. In the garden
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B. The boy running
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C. She eats breakfast
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D. Was seeing
Explanation
A complete sentence requires a subject and a verb, which "She eats breakfast" has.
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A. will be
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B. has been
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C. was
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D. have been
Explanation
This uses the present perfect continuous tense, which is used to describe an action that started in the past and is still continuing in the present.
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A. Quite
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B. Quiet
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C. Quait
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D. Quit
Explanation
He is quite satisfied with the remarks of his commissioner.
وہ اپنے کمشنر کے ریمارکس سے کافی مطمئن ہیں۔
"Quite" means fully or to a certain extent, which fits the context of being satisfied.
It indicates the degree of satisfaction in the sentence.
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